BYTS Interior

Interior Design Glossary — 50 Terms Every Kerala Homeowner Should Know

Interior Design Glossary — 50 Terms Every Kerala Homeowner Should Know — BYTS Interior Palakkad Kerala

Interior design conversations are full of terms that are obvious to designers but confusing to first-time homeowners. This glossary explains 50 of the most common terms in plain English — so you can read quotations confidently, understand every conversation with your designer, and make informed decisions.

Key takeaway

The three terms most misunderstood by Kerala homeowners: BWR versus commercial-grade plywood (the humidity performance gap is critical), carcass versus shutter (the box versus the door), and per-sq-ft rate (which area it actually applies to — always ask).

Material Terms

Term What it means Why it matters in Kerala
BWR Plywood Boiling Water Resistant plywood — IS:303 grade, phenol-formaldehyde bonded The correct material for all Kerala kitchen and wardrobe carcasses — moisture-proof
MR Plywood Moisture Resistant plywood — lower grade, urea-formaldehyde bonded Not suitable for Kerala kitchen carcasses — will swell in monsoon conditions
HDHMR High Density High Moisture Resistant board — engineered wood panel Alternative to plywood — acceptable with all edges fully sealed
MDF Medium Density Fibreboard — wood fibre and resin panel Good for door profiles in dry rooms — avoid near moisture in Kerala
Laminate (HPL) High Pressure Laminate — decorative surface bonded to core material Good shutter surface in dry areas — edges must be sealed in Kerala
Membrane / PVC foil Vacuum-pressed PVC film on MDF profile Best all-round shutter surface for Kerala kitchens — seamless, moisture-resistant
Acrylic shutter Solid acrylic panel bonded to substrate Premium, very durable, fully moisture-resistant — shows fingerprints on gloss
Veneer Thin real wood slice bonded to a substrate Natural wood appearance — requires sealing in Kerala humidity

Structural and Construction Terms

Term What it means
Carcass The box body of a cabinet unit — the structural shell, not the door
Shutter The door or drawer front of a cabinet unit — the visible face
Edge banding PVC or ABS strip applied to all cut edges of panels — seals exposed wood edges
Multi-boring Factory drilling of hinge holes and fixing holes at precise positions
CNC cutting Computer Numerical Control panel cutting — precision under 1mm tolerance
False ceiling Secondary ceiling installed below the structural slab — for lighting and aesthetics
GI frame Galvanised iron frame — the structural skeleton of a false ceiling
Gypsum board The panel material used on false ceilings and wall cladding — damaged by moisture
PVC ceiling panel Waterproof ceiling panel — appropriate for bathrooms and utility areas
Cove Concave recessed ledge at wall-ceiling junction — used for concealed LED lighting

Design and Layout Terms

Term What it means
Work triangle The three-point triangle between hob, sink, and refrigerator — determines kitchen efficiency
L-shape kitchen Kitchen with cabinets on two walls at a right angle
Parallel kitchen Kitchen with two facing rows of cabinets — also called galley kitchen
U-shape kitchen Kitchen with cabinets on three walls — maximum storage configuration
Island A free-standing central counter unit — requires substantial open floor space
Peninsula A counter attached to one wall that projects into the open area — alternative to an island
Soft-close Hinge or channel mechanism that slows and silences closing action
Full-extension channel Drawer slide that allows complete access to the full drawer depth
Magic corner Corner cabinet fitting that brings stored items forward for easy access
Larder unit Tall full-height storage cabinet — for pantry and appliance storage

Lighting Terms

Term What it means
Cove lighting Concealed LED strips in a cove that cast indirect light on the ceiling
Recessed light Light fixture installed flush with the ceiling surface — also called downlight
Colour temperature Warmth or coolness of light — 2700K warm white, 4000K neutral, 6500K cool white
Lux Unit of illuminance — how much light falls on a surface. Kitchen work surfaces need 300 to 500 lux.
CRI Colour Rendering Index — how accurately a light source renders colours. 90+ CRI recommended for kitchens.
Pendant light Hanging light fixture — decorative over dining tables and islands
Under-cabinet light LED strip mounted below wall cabinets to illuminate the countertop work surface

Contract and Process Terms

Term What it means
Itemised quotation Quotation that lists every material and component with individual prices — the only safe type
Package price Single total price for a scope without component breakdown — allows hidden substitutions
Variation order (VO) Formal document recording any change to the approved scope — must be signed before execution
BOQ Bill of Quantities — detailed list of every item with quantity and unit rate
Snag list List of items to be completed or corrected before handover — must be cleared before sign-off
Per sq ft rate Price per square foot — always clarify which area this applies to (shutter area, carcass area, or running foot)
Civil work Tile laying, plastering, painting, electrical, and plumbing — often excluded from interior quotations
Site readiness State of the construction site when interior installation can begin — all civil work completed
⚠️ Warning: Never accept a quotation that uses only package pricing without an itemised breakdown. Package prices – complete kitchen for X rupees – allow material substitution without your knowledge. An itemised quotation with every material specified by grade is the only contract that protects you.

Frequently asked questions

Q: What is the difference between a carcass and a shutter?
A: The carcass is the box body of a cabinet — the structural shell that holds the shelves and contains the storage space. The shutter is the door that you open and close to access the carcass. A carcass built from IS:303 BWR plywood determines how long the kitchen lasts. The shutter determines how the kitchen looks. Both matter — but the carcass matters more in Kerala.
Q: What does per sq ft rate mean in an interior quotation?
A: Per square foot rate is the price per unit area of the interior element being quoted. The confusion is that different firms measure different areas — some quote per sq ft of shutter area (the visible door surface), some quote per sq ft of carcass area (the total cabinet area including interior), and some quote per running foot of cabinet length. Always ask specifically: “Per sq ft of what area?” before comparing quotations.
Q: What does civil work mean and why is it often excluded from interior quotations?
A: Civil work refers to the construction trades that prepare the space for interior installation: tile laying, plastering and painting, creation of electrical points, and plumbing modifications. Interior firms typically quote only for the furniture and carpentry they supply and install — not for the civil preparation work. For a 3BHK in Kerala, excluded civil work can add significantly to the total project cost.
Q: What is the IS:303 standard?
A: IS:303 is the Bureau of Indian Standards certification for plywood used in furniture and interior applications. The IS:303 BWR (Boiling Water Resistant) grade is the highest performance level within this standard — it is required to withstand 8 hours of boiling water immersion without delaminating. This is the standard you should specify for all kitchen and wardrobe carcasses in Kerala.

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Design Team, BYTS Interior

10–20 years of combined interior design experience across Kerala and Tamil Nadu. All projects designed and manufactured at our Palakkad factory. Serving Palakkad, Thrissur, Kozhikode, Kochi & Coimbatore.

Disclaimer
The information shared in this article is based on BYTS Interior’s industry experience, project observations, and general interior design practices commonly followed in Kerala and South India. Project costs, timelines, material performance, approvals, and technical requirements may vary depending on site conditions, client preferences, market fluctuations, building structure, and local authority regulations. Readers are advised to consult qualified professionals before making financial, structural, or technical decisions based on this content.
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